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Feb 22, 2013
02/13
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the city has substantial control over that. when they do go up, there will be capital losses all over the place. interest rates go up. the prices go down. that includes my wife and i, we are going to suffer capital losses. and the risk management system of financial institution fails, like they filled in 2000 and 2009, if they do, they do will be serious lawsuits to a lot of institutions. if that happens, we should hit them over the head with a sledgehammer. it's not that they screwed up badly at that time, but they should have learned something from that. if they are not, they are going to suffer significant losses. that is inevitable. the only question is the timing, including the speed. although you never know for sure with markets. the housing bubble collapses pretty fast. this bond bubble, if you want to call it that. the question, of course, people should be listening. they should be listening. it should not cause a financial craddock wisdom. >> hello, i am an ordinary citizen, ordinary citizen number two. >> not just a s
the city has substantial control over that. when they do go up, there will be capital losses all over the place. interest rates go up. the prices go down. that includes my wife and i, we are going to suffer capital losses. and the risk management system of financial institution fails, like they filled in 2000 and 2009, if they do, they do will be serious lawsuits to a lot of institutions. if that happens, we should hit them over the head with a sledgehammer. it's not that they screwed up badly...
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Feb 18, 2013
02/13
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they were only made possible by the rise of the first city-stateses in mesopotamia about 5,000 years ago. by definition you could not have a conventional army without a state. and so until you had states, you had no conventional armies which had officers and enlisted ranks and a bureaucracy and logistics and all these other things that we associate with conventional armed forces. but guess what? as soon as you had the very first city-states in mesopotamia, they were immediately being attacked by nomads from the persian highlands. essentially, guerrillas. and so from the very start organized militaries have always spent a lot of their time fighting unconventional, irregular warfare. and you know what? those terms don't make a heck of a lot of sense. that's one of the big takeaways that i had from doing six years of reading and research for this book. the way we think about this entire subject is all messed up. we think that somehow conventional warfare is the norm, that the way you ought to fight is to have these conventional armies slugging it out in the open. but the reality is thos
they were only made possible by the rise of the first city-stateses in mesopotamia about 5,000 years ago. by definition you could not have a conventional army without a state. and so until you had states, you had no conventional armies which had officers and enlisted ranks and a bureaucracy and logistics and all these other things that we associate with conventional armed forces. but guess what? as soon as you had the very first city-states in mesopotamia, they were immediately being attacked...
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Feb 25, 2013
02/13
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the city repeatedly lost $300 million in state and federal ait because the union basically refused to implement a rigorous teacher evaluation the union basically refuse to implement a rigorous teacher evaluation system. everybody has to be evaluated. everybody has to be held accountable, the way of the world but the fact union refuse to do this and very rightfully mike stood his ground to say no because they wanted the model to just be in place for two years that happened that the of the teacher would be removed and then be referred back the mayor said no. what is the point*? where is the public outcry for that? where are the people picketing in the streets to say you cannot deny our kids $300 million because you refuse to be held accountable to have a reasonable evaluation system in place. this is where students first is organizing everyday people like you. you have got to get involved in the process because the legislators in albany, the governor could solve the problems they need to hear from people like you you'll make your decisions with you contribute to the next campaign based
the city repeatedly lost $300 million in state and federal ait because the union basically refused to implement a rigorous teacher evaluation the union basically refuse to implement a rigorous teacher evaluation system. everybody has to be evaluated. everybody has to be held accountable, the way of the world but the fact union refuse to do this and very rightfully mike stood his ground to say no because they wanted the model to just be in place for two years that happened that the of the...
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Feb 18, 2013
02/13
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through the middle of the city. with citizens of both sides during world war iii he wandered close to the boundary of the divided city me there on assignment or predetermined division he ended up feinstein to see the most through his camera were the american gis but he snapped a photograph of the unnamed clap the soldier it confirms this image was powerfully a single shot taken at a distance of black-and-white he stands as a subject between trolley tracks that culminate into the wall behind them. this encounter haunted freed and set him on course and beckoned his return from exile to come back to america to confront segregation and racism for the image would be the first photograph in black and white america and as in the book freed it sets this out and writes he and i coming to americans meet and part silently as deadly as the wall behind him is another wall there on the trolley tracks and on the cobblestones reaching back home it into our hearts dividing us wherever we me. i am white. he is black. from this point*
through the middle of the city. with citizens of both sides during world war iii he wandered close to the boundary of the divided city me there on assignment or predetermined division he ended up feinstein to see the most through his camera were the american gis but he snapped a photograph of the unnamed clap the soldier it confirms this image was powerfully a single shot taken at a distance of black-and-white he stands as a subject between trolley tracks that culminate into the wall behind...
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Feb 10, 2013
02/13
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it serves all sorts of people in the city of seattle. another thing to see, and marketers who think goofiest permission of the the common krumholtz collective, which exists now is an ngo in louisiana. 2005 after hurricane katrina in august 2005 izzo recalled there was the health care infrastructure collapsed in new orleans. many people were left in places like charity hospital today. a lot of first responders for that to be the city and often their catastrophic situations. so you have not only the health care infrastructure more particularly. within a few days of hurricane katrina, three activists start the common ground collective and very basic preliminary health care services for people who remained in the city. one of these people is malika verheyen, a member of the black panther party in new orleans. they talk about starting the common ground clinic with these two other people, a doctor at another act of this, he says very freely the reason he felt like he could do this in the face about this catastrophe all around them is they have
it serves all sorts of people in the city of seattle. another thing to see, and marketers who think goofiest permission of the the common krumholtz collective, which exists now is an ngo in louisiana. 2005 after hurricane katrina in august 2005 izzo recalled there was the health care infrastructure collapsed in new orleans. many people were left in places like charity hospital today. a lot of first responders for that to be the city and often their catastrophic situations. so you have not only...
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Feb 9, 2013
02/13
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the city? finally, the most interesting discussion may be the environmental discussion which turn 180 degrees in the last ten years. even within the global warming discussion you talk about carbon footprint and the balkan project which maps where our carbon footprints are, red is bad, green is good, look at the united states and it looks like satellite night sky of the united states, hottest around the cities, cooler in the suburbs, coolest in the country. that measure of co2 per square mile, in 2001, scotch bernstein of the center for neighborhood technology said what happens if instead of measuring ceo to provide we start measuring ceo to person or ceo to perhaps old? only a certain number of us and we can choose to live in places where we pollute more or less? look at sea a 2 per household the red and green just flipped, absolutely change places and healthiest place you can live is in the city. man hadn't burns 1-third of fossil fuels of people in dallas for example using a third of the elec
the city? finally, the most interesting discussion may be the environmental discussion which turn 180 degrees in the last ten years. even within the global warming discussion you talk about carbon footprint and the balkan project which maps where our carbon footprints are, red is bad, green is good, look at the united states and it looks like satellite night sky of the united states, hottest around the cities, cooler in the suburbs, coolest in the country. that measure of co2 per square mile,...
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Feb 17, 2013
02/13
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cities are the moral of the health and freedom of man. if we continue to pile upon ourselves to in the cities like they do in europe we shall -- one another as they do their. and that made sense back in the 1700's when we have the whole country spread out and the biggest byproduct was fertilizer. so it's a longer discussion. all three of these are longer discussions, but they are all national crises. the national economic crisis, which is only going to get tougher and we have a national health crisis which is bankrupting us and a sandy proved all too clear a couple of weeks ago global warming is beginning to affect us dramatically and now we are not talking about stopping it. obviously the less of it have the better we will be and the more we can do to solve these problems. that is the center of our challenge as a nation. >> now on booktv patrick james explains international relations using themes found in the book "lord of the rings." this is about half an hour. >> hello unwelcome to the scholar circle. the "lord of the rings" trilogy an
cities are the moral of the health and freedom of man. if we continue to pile upon ourselves to in the cities like they do in europe we shall -- one another as they do their. and that made sense back in the 1700's when we have the whole country spread out and the biggest byproduct was fertilizer. so it's a longer discussion. all three of these are longer discussions, but they are all national crises. the national economic crisis, which is only going to get tougher and we have a national health...
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Feb 10, 2013
02/13
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i can say this, and hideous the country, port-au-prince is a city in the other cities of the quake zone because her has historically been large earthquakes in northern haiti and god naÏve is routinely had a devastating floods, tropical storms and hurricanes. those places are no better prepared for disaster than they were on the 12th of january january 2010. in that sense, if there's another disaster and they could well be, a couple days of rain, a storm that in other places of the basically devastating there remains very high. there is a chance. there can be optimism. optimism is no evidence. if you want optimism, please go ahead. as long as people are life, there's hope. as long as people still have an opportunity to make choices, they can make better choices. we in developed nations who are dealing with haiti, we are links, we are all in one way or another because we are fully invested in the country's ties and we have literal investments in the future. we can decide to make good decisions that will make the country stronger and more resilient and better able to withstand disaster an
i can say this, and hideous the country, port-au-prince is a city in the other cities of the quake zone because her has historically been large earthquakes in northern haiti and god naÏve is routinely had a devastating floods, tropical storms and hurricanes. those places are no better prepared for disaster than they were on the 12th of january january 2010. in that sense, if there's another disaster and they could well be, a couple days of rain, a storm that in other places of the basically...
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Feb 25, 2013
02/13
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the city. the town, the entities we first formed in every early culture people come together around trade, creativity, living together, the neighborhood which we gathered. the ancient palace, which is where we started could conceively today act as an alternative agent in a modern world. and the great irony, beauty of that is that it closes a great circle. western civilization, civilizations everywhere started in towns, township, trading posts, and cities. but by the end of the ancient world it was clear that those cities were too small in the scale. too limited in their political representation to be capable of governing in the world that emerged in the mid evil empire and in the renaissance. in other words that's the scale of human society's grew. the township proved too small to deal with a large scale problems and so it required the invent of this of the renaissance in the early modern period to create the new idea of the nation of people. who then substituted themselves as a large entity ca
the city. the town, the entities we first formed in every early culture people come together around trade, creativity, living together, the neighborhood which we gathered. the ancient palace, which is where we started could conceively today act as an alternative agent in a modern world. and the great irony, beauty of that is that it closes a great circle. western civilization, civilizations everywhere started in towns, township, trading posts, and cities. but by the end of the ancient world it...
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Feb 2, 2013
02/13
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this is the capitol city and has been the seat of government since the founding 403 years ago. and so the exercise of political power and the development of public policy is another theme. the history of santa fe is distinctive. for one thing, santa fe became a u.s. territory in 1848. and it was a territory for a very long time. the country and washington were reluctant to make santa fe a state. that eventually happened in 1912. new mexico existed as a territory for so long, in someso many ways doesn't seem to fit the rest of the country. and in fact, santa fe proudly, for a long, long time, has described itself as the city different. santa fe was -- and new mexico were explored by the spanish, coming from the south to the north. not from anglos coming from the east to the west. that's one difference. this community that's closely tied to the catholic church, priests accompanied spanish settlers on their way north and establishment of the church and establishment of the community of santa fe are inseparable. of course, this is-was a spanish speaking territory. populated mostly
this is the capitol city and has been the seat of government since the founding 403 years ago. and so the exercise of political power and the development of public policy is another theme. the history of santa fe is distinctive. for one thing, santa fe became a u.s. territory in 1848. and it was a territory for a very long time. the country and washington were reluctant to make santa fe a state. that eventually happened in 1912. new mexico existed as a territory for so long, in someso many ways...
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Feb 25, 2013
02/13
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in the capital city. and the diplomacy with them and real life with them. in substance of how they behave at the u.n. we don't think the u.n. is that important. we don't wind up forcing them to take account of our positions on things many of which matter us. at least in the general assembly. we don't think it's worth the price we have to pay and the real world relationship with them in their own country. and we don't -- it means there's a disconnect between how we and our allies behave at the u.n. versus what our frequently far better relationships are directly in the capital. >> host: who are the new liberal realists you talk about in your book? >> guest: the obama administration came in split between two quite different camps. in the foreign policy. on the one hand you had a waive of people that i would describe typical describe liberal international. people believe in the mission of the u.n. to not just be the kind of diplomatic table where everybody negotiates and argues and debates and let's their views be known. something which is supposed to take on
in the capital city. and the diplomacy with them and real life with them. in substance of how they behave at the u.n. we don't think the u.n. is that important. we don't wind up forcing them to take account of our positions on things many of which matter us. at least in the general assembly. we don't think it's worth the price we have to pay and the real world relationship with them in their own country. and we don't -- it means there's a disconnect between how we and our allies behave at the...
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Feb 19, 2013
02/13
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so, again, what's the solution? the city. finally, the most interesting discussion maybe is the environmental discussion which has turned 180 degrees in the last ten years. you know, have you looked at -- even within the global warming discussion, you talk about carbon footprint and the vulcan project which maps where our carbon footprints are, you know, red is bad, green is good. you look at the united states, and it looks like the satellite night sky of the united states. hottest around the cities, cooler in the suburbs, coolest out in the country, right? but that measures co2 per square mile. in 2001 scott bernstein at the center for neighborhood technology in chicago said what happens if instead of measuring co2 per mile we start measuring co2 per person or per household? because there are only a certain number of us, and we can choose to live in places where we pollute more orless. if you look per household, the red and the green just flip, absolutely change places. and by far the healthiest place you can live is in the
so, again, what's the solution? the city. finally, the most interesting discussion maybe is the environmental discussion which has turned 180 degrees in the last ten years. you know, have you looked at -- even within the global warming discussion, you talk about carbon footprint and the vulcan project which maps where our carbon footprints are, you know, red is bad, green is good. you look at the united states, and it looks like the satellite night sky of the united states. hottest around the...
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Feb 19, 2013
02/13
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in fact in some cities like chicago, baltimore, philadelphia, d.c., the list could go on, in some cities the statistics are worse. in fact it was reported in chicago but if you take into account prisoners, if you bachelet count prisoners as people and keep in mind that prisoners are excluded from poverty statistics and unemployment data that is masking the severity but if you actually count prisoners townspeople in the chicago area, 80% of working age african-american men, criminal records to legalize discrimination for the rest of their lives. these men are part of a growing undercast, not class, a group of people defined largely by race relegated to permanent second-class status by law. now i find today that when i tell people i now believe that mass incarceration is like the new jim crow people react with a completed this believe they say how can you say that? our criminal justice system isn't of crime control and of black folks would stop running around committing so many crimes we wouldn't have to worry about being locked up in the civil and human rights. there lies the greatest myt
in fact in some cities like chicago, baltimore, philadelphia, d.c., the list could go on, in some cities the statistics are worse. in fact it was reported in chicago but if you take into account prisoners, if you bachelet count prisoners as people and keep in mind that prisoners are excluded from poverty statistics and unemployment data that is masking the severity but if you actually count prisoners townspeople in the chicago area, 80% of working age african-american men, criminal records to...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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in the city. santa fe has a population of 80,000 people, and it supports no less than 17 independent bookstores. how does collected works and the other 16 stay afloat? it's not easy. we all work very hard at what we do, and it is a very mutually-supportive community of bookstore owners. the city itself is tricultural with an amazing amount of very well read, very literary people. we boast more authors and points, both genuine and wannabes, than most communities. and the combination of six major musical organizations, an incredible museum system here, wonderful arts, ballet, opera. it is a rich cultural city, and the people that live here and the people that visit here come out and support that culture in all of its ramifications. the literary arts is just one of many here. i think what sents collected works apart is the fact that we really have this space, we're very fortunate to be in this beautiful space. we have the space to become a community center. and the fact that we do more than sell book
in the city. santa fe has a population of 80,000 people, and it supports no less than 17 independent bookstores. how does collected works and the other 16 stay afloat? it's not easy. we all work very hard at what we do, and it is a very mutually-supportive community of bookstore owners. the city itself is tricultural with an amazing amount of very well read, very literary people. we boast more authors and points, both genuine and wannabes, than most communities. and the combination of six major...
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Feb 3, 2013
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those leftovers went to the city, extra stock. a bend went as a part of the sister city program to a local gentleman down to mexico and went to children in mexico. so there you have literary art, the performing arts, the educational value and the city cultural outreach all-in-one book. wherever you are go and investigate a local store. see if you like it. try to form an allegiance to it. if you don't like what they carry tell them. a lot of what we order comes from suggestion from our customers. i wish you had this book, which you have that book. we will get it for them and very often we will get another copy for the store and very often that will so quickly. goatee or both of store whatever you're trying to buy and see what they haven't talked to the people and talk to your neighbors. >> for more information booktv's recent visit to santa fe new mexico in the many other cities visited by local content vehicles go to c-span.org/local content.
those leftovers went to the city, extra stock. a bend went as a part of the sister city program to a local gentleman down to mexico and went to children in mexico. so there you have literary art, the performing arts, the educational value and the city cultural outreach all-in-one book. wherever you are go and investigate a local store. see if you like it. try to form an allegiance to it. if you don't like what they carry tell them. a lot of what we order comes from suggestion from our...
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Feb 23, 2013
02/13
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time for them to go off to new york city, it wasn't the time for them to go off to philadelphia. but again, he was talked into it in terms of his duty. everyone said you are the only one who can make this new nation into a nation that will survive, and he believed that, and so he took it on. um, she came to believe that, but she still found it very hard -- found it very hard to forgive all of his political enemies who took advantage of his sense of duty to play all sorts of political games and tricks with him. .. it shows her on a platform receiving. but of course, she didn't do that. that is the 19th century re-imagination. actually, they received a plane, drawing room and she sat on the couch and often on the couch sat with her was abigail adams. abigail considered that her place to sit next to mrs. washington. they met people as they came in. they shook hands, but there was never the sense of a platform or thrown to raise them above. that was never the way that she looked at herself as the president's first lady. it was never the way that he looked at himself. they both had a
time for them to go off to new york city, it wasn't the time for them to go off to philadelphia. but again, he was talked into it in terms of his duty. everyone said you are the only one who can make this new nation into a nation that will survive, and he believed that, and so he took it on. um, she came to believe that, but she still found it very hard -- found it very hard to forgive all of his political enemies who took advantage of his sense of duty to play all sorts of political games and...
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Feb 4, 2013
02/13
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and they turn for the first look at the new york city skyline, the city where they learn the english and if the sun was bright, it would be cleaning up the gold dome of the world doping. not a monument to manufacturing or agriculture, but a monument to the american price, the on the constitutionally performance says to the prius coming at the rate to make steel in the new york world will be there ticket to understanding and learning english and american politics. he was very difficult man to the bethesda biographer. he was sort of like the howard hughes pit at the peak of his power, the most powerful publisher. his newspaper had "the new york times," cnn and the "washington post" all combined in people read the world and away when i was a child used to watch the three networks on tv. so you've reached this enormous pentacle power and begin to go blind. beethoven couldn't hear his music. at the same time, he became beset with a number of psychological issues, one of which raise disturbing. the room in which he could go in and get refuge from sound. is the exciting match and had a spec
and they turn for the first look at the new york city skyline, the city where they learn the english and if the sun was bright, it would be cleaning up the gold dome of the world doping. not a monument to manufacturing or agriculture, but a monument to the american price, the on the constitutionally performance says to the prius coming at the rate to make steel in the new york world will be there ticket to understanding and learning english and american politics. he was very difficult man to...
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Feb 23, 2013
02/13
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of the divided city. neither on assignment, nor with a predetermined vision who he ended up finding and seeing the most through his camera were american g.i.s. but here at the the wall in its nascent days, freed snapped a photograph of an unnamed black soldier standing at the edge of the american sector. freed's contact sheets from this trip confirm that this image was powerfully a single shot. taken at a middle distance in black and white, freed stands with his subject between a set of trolley tracks that culminate into the imposed boundary of the wall behind them. this encounter haunted freed. it set him off course and beckoned his return from exile to come back to america to confront segregation and racism. image would end up being the first photograph in "black and white america," and as ap annotation in the book, freed sets this out as its point of departure. he writes: we, he and i, two americans, we meet silently, and we part silently. impregnable and as deadly as the wall behind him is another wal
of the divided city. neither on assignment, nor with a predetermined vision who he ended up finding and seeing the most through his camera were american g.i.s. but here at the the wall in its nascent days, freed snapped a photograph of an unnamed black soldier standing at the edge of the american sector. freed's contact sheets from this trip confirm that this image was powerfully a single shot. taken at a middle distance in black and white, freed stands with his subject between a set of trolley...
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Feb 4, 2013
02/13
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so there you have the literary arts, the performing arts, the educational value, and the city cultural outreach. all in one volume. we have so many great customers. they say, i wish you had this book or that the grid very often we will get a copy for the store. whatever you are trying to buy, talk to the people, talk to your neighbors. >> tv recently explored the literary culture of santa fe, new mexico. keep watching all weekend long for more from our area. >> hello, i am rob dean. i am the editor of the local newspaper that is 164 years old. we are in the offices of the "santa fe new mexican." i am also the author of "santa fe, its 400th year: exploring the past, defining the future." the book had a humble beginning. it was not, at first, design is about grid it began as a series of newspaper stories to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the founding of santa fe. in 1959, the publisher and editor had the presence of mind to ask a pulitzer-winning novelist to write about the history as it emerges through the pages of the "santa fe new mexican." he published the autobiography of sant
so there you have the literary arts, the performing arts, the educational value, and the city cultural outreach. all in one volume. we have so many great customers. they say, i wish you had this book or that the grid very often we will get a copy for the store. whatever you are trying to buy, talk to the people, talk to your neighbors. >> tv recently explored the literary culture of santa fe, new mexico. keep watching all weekend long for more from our area. >> hello, i am rob dean....
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Feb 24, 2013
02/13
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he is stuck city decides i will negotiate the end of the war in the treaty is sent back to president polk he is outraged and ejected tailored misstate -- administration to compensate for expensive but president polk cannot send the treaty to the senate after he publicly said the terms and it is everything he asked for initially before he changed his mind to get the whole thing. lincoln and his colleagues very, very successful. with the hands on the omnibus postal will and benefits those in his district, he is a player with the issues of "war and peace." >> you have shared a desk with some cool characters. had to interact with these guys? what is a process for finding the next turn in finding the next turn in your narrative? >> it was great fun to research. had to add value to lincoln's story it is only the third book of him in congress in history there are so many books so i will look at letters of his colleagues from the 30th congress most people have not even looked sue their letters. one example of a house mate from abolition house his papers are in harrisburg pennsylvania. the cu
he is stuck city decides i will negotiate the end of the war in the treaty is sent back to president polk he is outraged and ejected tailored misstate -- administration to compensate for expensive but president polk cannot send the treaty to the senate after he publicly said the terms and it is everything he asked for initially before he changed his mind to get the whole thing. lincoln and his colleagues very, very successful. with the hands on the omnibus postal will and benefits those in his...
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Feb 23, 2013
02/13
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when i was first elected to the city council i went to the city manager and talked to him about pride and things. he said here is your job. we have a capital improvement plan. the things we have to do over the next ten years and it costs so many million dollars and he said here is the problem. the public collectively is not willing to pay for what the public collectively wants. and is so true. is even truer in congress. the expectation is there can be current or more service delivered in an efficient, professional way for less money and the math doesn't work. you can do more with less once in awhile but year after year after year you simply can't and that is the most difficult thing for people to understand. you look at the gap that i've put up their about the vast amount drained by the bush tax cuts, some of that has gone back but only some of it because by and large the american people do not want any money spent on taxes. the price being paid for that is not so much an individual price. more a price that involves the health of the population and overall education level of our kids
when i was first elected to the city council i went to the city manager and talked to him about pride and things. he said here is your job. we have a capital improvement plan. the things we have to do over the next ten years and it costs so many million dollars and he said here is the problem. the public collectively is not willing to pay for what the public collectively wants. and is so true. is even truer in congress. the expectation is there can be current or more service delivered in an...
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Feb 21, 2013
02/13
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that this is the third city on my tour. i was first in washington, my new home. i went back to the home of my heart, new york, over the weekend and as you saw on television i was back and forth a lot. [laughter] and this is my first trip outside. i am delighted. this is my first trip to texas and i am here in houston. [applause] i wanted to visit more than one city and i'm going to austin but i got to replace that i want to. i still have a day job and i only have a few days to visit cities and promote my book but i make the promise on television so you can hold me to it ,-com,-com ma i will be back to visit other cities in texas. [applause] now randall where are you? i didn't see where you went. all zero kho they are right there. u part of the reason that i did, and it was randall and suzanne martin, the founders of the progressive forum, who put this visit together. they have extended everyone think courtesy to me. i even had -- for dinner tonight. [applause] and i am surrounded by flowers some of which i describe in the book from my beloved, part of my beloved
that this is the third city on my tour. i was first in washington, my new home. i went back to the home of my heart, new york, over the weekend and as you saw on television i was back and forth a lot. [laughter] and this is my first trip outside. i am delighted. this is my first trip to texas and i am here in houston. [applause] i wanted to visit more than one city and i'm going to austin but i got to replace that i want to. i still have a day job and i only have a few days to visit cities and...
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Feb 17, 2013
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and the answer, again, is the city. this is fundamentally the opposite of the american ethos, you know? from jefferson on. cities are essential to the health and freedom of man. if we continue to pile upon ourselves in cities as they do in europe, we shall take to eating one another as they do there. [laughter] that was jefferson. and that just continued and continued. and it made sense back in the 1700s when we had the whole country to spread out on. but that's not the case now. so it's a longer discussion. all three of these are a longer discussion. but they're all national crises. we have a national economic crisis which is only going to get tougher, we have a national health crisis which is bankrupting us, and as sandy proved all too clear a couple weeks ago, global warming is beginning to affect us dramatically. and now we're not talking about stopping it, we're talking about mitigating it. but, obviously, the less of
and the answer, again, is the city. this is fundamentally the opposite of the american ethos, you know? from jefferson on. cities are essential to the health and freedom of man. if we continue to pile upon ourselves in cities as they do in europe, we shall take to eating one another as they do there. [laughter] that was jefferson. and that just continued and continued. and it made sense back in the 1700s when we had the whole country to spread out on. but that's not the case now. so it's a...
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Feb 10, 2013
02/13
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the mayor and he was i guess standing in the rubble of the city hall or something like that. but what was his -- >> well, the people there who have been in shelters for almost a month were very upset that the war ended when it did. they wanted it finished. and they said we live in shelters for three months if this will be the end of it. but his view was they burned trees. we replayed 100 trees. someday we're going to be a gateway to israel and the love will come and we will have dinner together. that's our goal. we want to be the gateway to the north. and he was all about building and rebuilding and planting, entries are very big deal in israel. it's the only country in the world that has more trees at the turn of the 21st century than it had at the beginning of the 21st century. and everybody plants trees every time they turn around. so the first thing do is go out and plant trees. and more trees, and that's what he talked about. it's a defiance but it's also a spirit of building and life. yeah, the people were sorry the war ended when it did prevented when it ended badly be
the mayor and he was i guess standing in the rubble of the city hall or something like that. but what was his -- >> well, the people there who have been in shelters for almost a month were very upset that the war ended when it did. they wanted it finished. and they said we live in shelters for three months if this will be the end of it. but his view was they burned trees. we replayed 100 trees. someday we're going to be a gateway to israel and the love will come and we will have dinner...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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in which he documents the evolution of santa fe style and why the city fathers decided that we needed to improve the santa fe look to an earlier time in order to attract tourism. and why did he feel that that's not necessarily been an advantage for santa fe's culture. and certainly not to advance authentic indigenous architecture. a famous novel was written in the latter part of the 19th century that is still in print today come has nothing at all to do with new mexico. it was an accident of chance that the author was general rawlins who wrote ben hur, the last few chapters were written here in the palace of the governors in santa fe, new mexico, because general wallace had been called upon by the president of the united states to come here and serve as territorial governor and try to resolve the lincoln county war and some of the other problems in this very wild territory. i mean, gunbattles were taking over and land grabs are taking place all over new mexico. it was a really wild west. while he was who he had to grapple with billy the kid. and billy the kid is a real live historical
in which he documents the evolution of santa fe style and why the city fathers decided that we needed to improve the santa fe look to an earlier time in order to attract tourism. and why did he feel that that's not necessarily been an advantage for santa fe's culture. and certainly not to advance authentic indigenous architecture. a famous novel was written in the latter part of the 19th century that is still in print today come has nothing at all to do with new mexico. it was an accident of...
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Feb 11, 2013
02/13
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cities in the third straight year. the list is based on research done by mr. miller who looked at the number of bookstores and libraries as well as newspaper circulation and the education level of each of the city's population you can see them by going to u.s. a today. >> a library dhaka was checked out in 1958 made its way back to the new york public library on monday. the 55 years overdue book was returned with an envelope with a check for $100 to cover the cost. the manager jennifer says the records don't date back to the 1950's, so it is impossible to know who the book more work was. the overdue book was the biography of a priest title defier of france and xavier. state to date on the breaking news on publishing by liking as on facebook or you can follow us on a trader at booktv or visit the web site, booktv.org and click on news about books. >> what role does religion play? it seems to be important in who is going to have children and who is not, but it's in the sense of belief that in attendance the church servic
cities in the third straight year. the list is based on research done by mr. miller who looked at the number of bookstores and libraries as well as newspaper circulation and the education level of each of the city's population you can see them by going to u.s. a today. >> a library dhaka was checked out in 1958 made its way back to the new york public library on monday. the 55 years overdue book was returned with an envelope with a check for $100 to cover the cost. the manager jennifer...
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Feb 19, 2013
02/13
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more ominous in the city. it was impossible to say exactly how many people were now sleeping under open skies but the most widely used estimates estimated over a ten knock of the donary's population. jurists reporting on the camps. crime-ridden hot beds of simmering unrest, at risk for further calamity. microcosm for their widely held view of haiti. the high lot of the secretary general's visit was a trip to one of these camps. up the hill, on the golf course. the iron gated clubhouse was still a ford operating base of the u.s. army. young paratroopers peered with curiosity as the diplomatic entered with a fay los angeles of security guards. out front was a more familiar face. it bearer was becoming a force even more powerful than the soldiers, sean penn arrived. for a few days the landing team of the relief organization, or jphro, distributed water filters and medical aid here' and there. then an army officer invited inside the wire. most workers were excited about actress ma rooa. both acors lived in a struc
more ominous in the city. it was impossible to say exactly how many people were now sleeping under open skies but the most widely used estimates estimated over a ten knock of the donary's population. jurists reporting on the camps. crime-ridden hot beds of simmering unrest, at risk for further calamity. microcosm for their widely held view of haiti. the high lot of the secretary general's visit was a trip to one of these camps. up the hill, on the golf course. the iron gated clubhouse was still...
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Feb 18, 2013
02/13
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the city. with the citizens of both sides staring on the brink of world war iii, freed wandered close to the boundary dividing the city. night on assignment nor with a predetermined edition, who ended out, ended up finding and seeing the most through his cameras were american gis. but here at the wall, freed step to photograph of an end named blacblack soldier standing at te edge of the american sector. freed context from this trip confirmed that this image was powerfully a single shot. taken at a middle-distance in black and white, freed stand with the subject between a set of trolley tracks that culminate into the imposed boundaries of the wall behind them. this encounter haunted freed. it sent them off course, and beckoned his return from exile to come back to america, to confront segregation and racism. this image would end up being the first photograph in black and white america. and as an annotation in the book, freed sets this out as a point of departure. he writes, we come he and i come
the city. with the citizens of both sides staring on the brink of world war iii, freed wandered close to the boundary dividing the city. night on assignment nor with a predetermined edition, who ended out, ended up finding and seeing the most through his cameras were american gis. but here at the wall, freed step to photograph of an end named blacblack soldier standing at te edge of the american sector. freed context from this trip confirmed that this image was powerfully a single shot. taken...
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Feb 24, 2013
02/13
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the big cities, particularly on the east coast, but los angeles, too. the big cities were full of foreigners who hung out in saloons and had to be controlled. they were ruining america. the people in the heartlands who always voted for prohibition were particularly worried about the threat of others. race. the final wheels of prohibition started in the south and exactly the time when jim crow goes into place between 1905 and 1915. the idea of trying to control african-americans, needing to control african-americans, led to the idea that we had to control drink throughout the south. so prohibition becomes very important. all wrapped up with trying to keep african-americans in their place after 50 years of struggle following the self-war. it was crucial for prohibition that the democrats retook congress, by the way, in the wilson administration. third, very differently, it was a women's issue. it was a moral issue that was part of the effort to stop violence against women in the 19th and early 20th century. whatever women's suffrage was, prohibition in ev
the big cities, particularly on the east coast, but los angeles, too. the big cities were full of foreigners who hung out in saloons and had to be controlled. they were ruining america. the people in the heartlands who always voted for prohibition were particularly worried about the threat of others. race. the final wheels of prohibition started in the south and exactly the time when jim crow goes into place between 1905 and 1915. the idea of trying to control african-americans, needing to...
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Feb 10, 2013
02/13
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and i don't know of another place in the city or maybe anywhere else where the extraordinary opportunities to witness the essence of america is more palpable, more visible and more apparent. herein lies the story of our nation. and i'm very grateful for the extraordinary leadership to david and his strong team provides, and for the opportunity to visit as we do with such routine and casual approach. i don't how many times i've been there, and each and every time it's a memorable experience. david mentioned that the co-author, and there will want to emphasize how much of an enjoyable expense it was to work with charles robbins. he couldn't be here today, but charles is a very gifted and respected writer of many years. and it was just a pleasure to work with them. so i salute him and thank him as well. our book was just released this week. and it is an exciting month for an author to of had his work published and released as it has been again. so i celebrate that fact this week. it's all about the body of the united states senate. its history, its current circumstances and our aspirations fo
and i don't know of another place in the city or maybe anywhere else where the extraordinary opportunities to witness the essence of america is more palpable, more visible and more apparent. herein lies the story of our nation. and i'm very grateful for the extraordinary leadership to david and his strong team provides, and for the opportunity to visit as we do with such routine and casual approach. i don't how many times i've been there, and each and every time it's a memorable experience....
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Feb 19, 2013
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it's about 13,000 feet high, and the airport, which is a plateau above the city, is even higher. so the oxygen content is 40% also at sea level. so you suffer terrible alt altitude psychness, extreme fatigue, headaches and you don't want to do anything unless you consume coca products. whether it's chewing coca or coca candy or coca tea and that will allow you to acclimate to the altitude. so it is not what you feel when you chew the coke cashing it's what you don't feel you. don't feel high but you don't feel the altitude and you don't get those headaches. and so it's a very benign product. but one more point about the perceptions of coca. when the spaniards first started heading south and started getting into the andes they ran across people with the custom of chewing coca, and the church thought this must be the work of the devil. it's in their mouths and leafs and green and slimy. they banned it. on pain of death, until they ran into the biggest silver deposit in the history of the world. a mountain in bolivia. 14,000 feet high. and there was no way they were going to be able
it's about 13,000 feet high, and the airport, which is a plateau above the city, is even higher. so the oxygen content is 40% also at sea level. so you suffer terrible alt altitude psychness, extreme fatigue, headaches and you don't want to do anything unless you consume coca products. whether it's chewing coca or coca candy or coca tea and that will allow you to acclimate to the altitude. so it is not what you feel when you chew the coke cashing it's what you don't feel you. don't feel high...
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Feb 23, 2013
02/13
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in the big city, it could be more than 10 minutes. but there is another narrative, and that is that it succeeded. it succeeded in the conservative areas of the country. in the south and in the midwestern heartland. all of the places that wanted to say that we are not like those people in the cities. we are not foreigners. we are americans, and we believe in prohibition. to this day, half the counties of the united states are still dry. you just don't find those dry counties in places like rhode island. which is just to say that the culture wars and the efforts of prohibitions are beautifully described in this book, and they go on. as everyone has said, that's not very good news for america or our friends and leaders around the world. but it is very good news indeed for the longevity that this book will have. thank you. [applause] >> if we could get a response to some of those comments? what you think? >> i'm not going to say much. i'm digesting the comments that my colleagues have made. making sense of the book better than i did. so i
in the big city, it could be more than 10 minutes. but there is another narrative, and that is that it succeeded. it succeeded in the conservative areas of the country. in the south and in the midwestern heartland. all of the places that wanted to say that we are not like those people in the cities. we are not foreigners. we are americans, and we believe in prohibition. to this day, half the counties of the united states are still dry. you just don't find those dry counties in places like rhode...
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Feb 22, 2013
02/13
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the state has been great at creating that cities become destructive over the long-term. the myth they have created is that it was caused by deregulation of banking industry agreed on wall street. the simple fact is the banking industry was not deregulated under the bush administration. read the patriot act, the privacy act of sarbanes-oxley. we were missed regulated, not deregulated. secondly, while the money greed, i've been working for 40 years. it is not a sudden plague of greed out of the north it does nothing they are, nothing different. that's not what caused the financial crisis bearden in my book i talk about sixteens. first, primary costs was government policy. mixture varies by industry. the least regulated industries technology, which by the way has done very well. the most regulated financial service. after we had our biggest problem. secondly, government policy created a massive disinvestment pickup focus in the residential real estate market. that bubble burst is all due to strain showing for dollars allows. thirdly, large financial institutions called wall
the state has been great at creating that cities become destructive over the long-term. the myth they have created is that it was caused by deregulation of banking industry agreed on wall street. the simple fact is the banking industry was not deregulated under the bush administration. read the patriot act, the privacy act of sarbanes-oxley. we were missed regulated, not deregulated. secondly, while the money greed, i've been working for 40 years. it is not a sudden plague of greed out of the...
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Feb 17, 2013
02/13
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when i was elected to the city council i went to a city manager and i talked to them about how he secures your job we have a capital improvements plan, and the things we have to do over the next ten years will cost so many of millions of dollars. he said here's the problem the public collectively isn't willing to pay for with public collectively wants and it's true, it's even true in congress of. the expectation is when there can be current or more service delivered in an efficient and professional way for less money and the math doesn't work. you can do more with less once in awhile, but year after year after year you can't and i think that is the most difficult thing for people to understand. that's why you'll get the gatt i put out with the vast amount trained by the bush tax cut some of it has gone down but only some of it because by and large the american people don't want more money spent on taxes but the price that is being paid for that isn't so much an individual price. it's more a price that involves the overall health of the population and the overall education level. but it's
when i was elected to the city council i went to a city manager and i talked to them about how he secures your job we have a capital improvements plan, and the things we have to do over the next ten years will cost so many of millions of dollars. he said here's the problem the public collectively isn't willing to pay for with public collectively wants and it's true, it's even true in congress of. the expectation is when there can be current or more service delivered in an efficient and...
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Feb 21, 2013
02/13
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the morning after the night martin luther king was assassinated in this city, they just exploded. the 1960's in 1968 was a time of major turmoil and change in the that states, and it was also a huge time of change in your life because you get -- you did something that was difficult, you get a divorce after a very long marriage. it was the time when the women's movement was really beginning to get under way in the united states. i was impressed that you were not inspired by the women's movement. it was something else. [inaudible] >> said to a lot of reading. and i was very inspired by the people who sell this country. i read. coming from england, you know, i had a listed. and coming to this country and reading the stories of the pioneers and the women and what happened to them,. [inaudible] she was a woman admiral. but i really love the stories of the pioneers. it meant much more in my life than the woman's movement. it irritated me, actually. it did not think much. >> exactly. in marriage at the end of 1968 ushered in one of the most fruitful and productive and rewarding times in
the morning after the night martin luther king was assassinated in this city, they just exploded. the 1960's in 1968 was a time of major turmoil and change in the that states, and it was also a huge time of change in your life because you get -- you did something that was difficult, you get a divorce after a very long marriage. it was the time when the women's movement was really beginning to get under way in the united states. i was impressed that you were not inspired by the women's movement....
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Feb 17, 2013
02/13
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he needs to go after the shia militia in the neighborhood of sadr city. prime minister maliki had told his predecessor stay out of sadr city. because the head of that militia now solder was in some kind of alliance with maliki. petraeus comes in. he just doesn't. a distance this guy into sadr city. does away for any approval. so that's kind of how he operates. within nine months this is actually working. there is a huge decline in sectarian violence. there's a huge decline in casualties off all kinds. but here's where we are coming to the problem to have a problem with the counterinsurgency theory generally. petraeus have said all along that what his goal was, the whole idea of this campaign was to create some breathing space. the zone of security so that the iraqi factions, sunni, shia, kurds and others, they can get their act together. they can forge a coherent government without having to worry about getting blown up every 10 minutes. the problem was that maliki, shia leader of iraq had no interest in doing this. you don't interest in setting up an oil
he needs to go after the shia militia in the neighborhood of sadr city. prime minister maliki had told his predecessor stay out of sadr city. because the head of that militia now solder was in some kind of alliance with maliki. petraeus comes in. he just doesn't. a distance this guy into sadr city. does away for any approval. so that's kind of how he operates. within nine months this is actually working. there is a huge decline in sectarian violence. there's a huge decline in casualties off all...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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in our school systems, university city. the way to do that is to totally privatize education. do that without tax credits but what that would create i think is competition in education. since ideas are better, those ideas will win out if they continue in a fair arena. long-term the biggest fight is over the education system and privatizing education. and also interestingly, minorities were huge victims of our education system. it's not designed except for people -- that's not a very acceptable kind of system. the long-term fight is about education. the fight in the short term i think we have to combined philosophical ideas and we do need, we got in attack against leaders across the spectrum by really world class -- these statist ideas, these experience have all been tried and of all been failed. if we do it right, we might not convince the people on the far left that they are right but we will convince them to be less confident in the ideas, and so we have to preach to the choir on philosophy and for the people who don't vo
in our school systems, university city. the way to do that is to totally privatize education. do that without tax credits but what that would create i think is competition in education. since ideas are better, those ideas will win out if they continue in a fair arena. long-term the biggest fight is over the education system and privatizing education. and also interestingly, minorities were huge victims of our education system. it's not designed except for people -- that's not a very acceptable...
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Feb 19, 2013
02/13
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his mother has been a much admired society host cities in london. she was famous for inviting known political enemies to denar and seating them so as to facilitate discussions. churchill once praised hi mothers by saying in his interest she, quote, had left no cutlet uncooked. churchill must have learn from her early on how to manage a dinner for his own purposes. in the book, i describe how he deployed this skill this, attention to detail. at his birthday party dinner tehran in 1943, he arranged the seating himself. at pots dam he had his staffers construct a table that could accommodate the 28 guests he had chosen. he then had his staff sit down at the table to see how close together or far apart the guests would be. imagine the staff person putting their el low0s out like this, watching churchill for his approval to make sure the seating was the way he wanted it. at this important dinner churchill would be meeting with president trumanan for the first time. churchill amended the menu to add another course. ham salad. nobody knows what he had in m
his mother has been a much admired society host cities in london. she was famous for inviting known political enemies to denar and seating them so as to facilitate discussions. churchill once praised hi mothers by saying in his interest she, quote, had left no cutlet uncooked. churchill must have learn from her early on how to manage a dinner for his own purposes. in the book, i describe how he deployed this skill this, attention to detail. at his birthday party dinner tehran in 1943, he...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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so there you have the literary arts, the performing arts, the educational value and the city cultural outreach all in one volume. form an allegiance to it. if you don't like what they carry, tell them. a lot of what we order comes from suggestions from our customers. i wish you had this book, i wish you had that book. and we'll get it for them. and very often we'll get another copy for the store, and very often that will sell brick quickly. so go to your local store whatever you're trying to buy. see what they have, talk to the people. these are your maybe the neighbors. -- these are your neighbors. >> for more information on booktv's recent visit to santa fe, new mexico, go to c-span.org/localcontent. >>> and now, general stanley mcchrystal discusses his memoir, "my share of the task." in the book the former commander of u.s. forces in afghanistan recounts the major turning points in his 34-year military career which ended in 2010. this is about an hour. [applause] >> well, thank you very much. thanks for coming out. i think this is a wonderful opportunity. the gentleman sitting next
so there you have the literary arts, the performing arts, the educational value and the city cultural outreach all in one volume. form an allegiance to it. if you don't like what they carry, tell them. a lot of what we order comes from suggestions from our customers. i wish you had this book, i wish you had that book. and we'll get it for them. and very often we'll get another copy for the store, and very often that will sell brick quickly. so go to your local store whatever you're trying to...
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Feb 2, 2013
02/13
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would turn and have the first look at the new york city skyline, the city that would welcome them, where they learn their english, where they get their first foothold on the american economic life and if the sun was right you be leaning off of the gold dome of the world building, not a monument to congress or banking or manufacturing or agriculture but a monument to the american press, the only constitutionally explicitly constitutionally protected business in the united states by the first amendment, doesn't say you have the right to make steel, the new york world's that will be there, the ticket to understanding how to get ahead, learning english and to american politics. that is the effect pulitzer had back then. he was a difficult man to live with as a biographer. he was the howard hughes of the nineteenth century. at the peak of his power, when he was publisher of the most powerful publisher of the globe, his paper had the power of the new york times, cnn and washington post and cbs all combined. people read the world in the way that people when i was a child used to watch the three
would turn and have the first look at the new york city skyline, the city that would welcome them, where they learn their english, where they get their first foothold on the american economic life and if the sun was right you be leaning off of the gold dome of the world building, not a monument to congress or banking or manufacturing or agriculture but a monument to the american press, the only constitutionally explicitly constitutionally protected business in the united states by the first...
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Feb 23, 2013
02/13
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meetings, and amazingly elaborate festival that was set up with 40 pickup stations around the city where they charged the regular bus fare and made it possible for people to go to work, go to church, go to doctors, go shopping and other errands. people would use the the 4 victory sign to identify themselves. it tends to break the legion, people were often felt it with food, stones, urine and other things, please continue the pulling over car pool on real and imaginary violations. the white citizens council membership explodes, 14,000 members in the first three month of the boycott, mayor and police commissioner join and in february using an old law on the books they indict 89 boycott leaders. but instead of weakening the organization this threatens the resolve. rosa parks spends much of that year fund-raising crisscrossing the country raising money for the montgomerie of improvement association for the naacp. even though her own family is in serious financial trouble she loses her job a month in to the boycott, she is working at montgomery fair and her husband is a barber at the nassau a
meetings, and amazingly elaborate festival that was set up with 40 pickup stations around the city where they charged the regular bus fare and made it possible for people to go to work, go to church, go to doctors, go shopping and other errands. people would use the the 4 victory sign to identify themselves. it tends to break the legion, people were often felt it with food, stones, urine and other things, please continue the pulling over car pool on real and imaginary violations. the white...
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Feb 17, 2013
02/13
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the third day by tribal rivals. the fourth day by drone strikes, and in complete desperation he sends somebody out to waziristan , huge chunks living in cities as destitute refugees, and every day is like 9/11 for us. so, again, go back to the man in the village, and particularly the impact on women and children. whatever the debate about drones, remember there's a model humanitarian dimension that is missing. the impact on women and children is devastating and this has been documented in studies like the recent one by stanford and new york university. >> host: you mentioned drones and a lot of your book, your newest book, the thisle this --e and the drone, and the debate in washington. what's the view of drones in these tribal areas, afghanistan, pakistan? >> guest: again, peter, you use the word debate. there is a debate in the united states. it's just starting and it will pick up. but the debate implies two opposing points of view. the donate americaer americaer - the debate in america is one sided. i would like
the third day by tribal rivals. the fourth day by drone strikes, and in complete desperation he sends somebody out to waziristan , huge chunks living in cities as destitute refugees, and every day is like 9/11 for us. so, again, go back to the man in the village, and particularly the impact on women and children. whatever the debate about drones, remember there's a model humanitarian dimension that is missing. the impact on women and children is devastating and this has been documented in...
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Feb 9, 2013
02/13
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same area he grew up in the living and dying timber city, and your doctor returns home. arguing the federal government is consolidating legislative power and that individual states must protect the citizenry from constitutional violations. in 1953, a leading feminist published the feminine mystique, but that was central to the second wave of feminism and the u.s. releasing a 50th anniversary edition with a foreword by new york times columnist and then afterward by novelist and former columnist and equipment. look for these titles in bookstores this coming week and watch for the authors in the near future on book tv and don c-span.org -- booktv.org. >> a correspondent with the washington post and the author of the rise of mark of rubio. what is the appeal? a lot of people else other republican party are watching engaging to get a sense of whether a latino politicians can broaden the base outside of his own community. his -- >> is he running for president? >> well, who is and what they elected to the senate he is clearly an ambitious person and has risen quickly . he has e
same area he grew up in the living and dying timber city, and your doctor returns home. arguing the federal government is consolidating legislative power and that individual states must protect the citizenry from constitutional violations. in 1953, a leading feminist published the feminine mystique, but that was central to the second wave of feminism and the u.s. releasing a 50th anniversary edition with a foreword by new york times columnist and then afterward by novelist and former columnist...
87
87
Feb 18, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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and the airport, a plateau above the city is even higher. so your oxygen content at that altitude is about 40% of which would have at sea level. so you suffered terrible altitude sickness, had expected utility do anything for the first two days, and less you consume coca products, whether chewing coca or having the coca candy they sell at the airport, or coca seeds. that will allow you to a clinic to that attitude -- altitude. it's not what you feel when you chew the coca. it's what you don't do. you don't feel high but you don't feel the altitude and you don't get those headaches. and so it's a very benign product. but one more point about the perceptions of coca. when the spaniards first started having south, getting to the andes, they ran across these indigenous peoples let the customer of chewing coca. and the church thought this must be the work of the devil, right? this vile thing in their mouth, green, slimy. they banded. until they ran into the biggest silver deposits in the history of the world. a mountain in bolivia, 14,000 feet hi
and the airport, a plateau above the city is even higher. so your oxygen content at that altitude is about 40% of which would have at sea level. so you suffered terrible altitude sickness, had expected utility do anything for the first two days, and less you consume coca products, whether chewing coca or having the coca candy they sell at the airport, or coca seeds. that will allow you to a clinic to that attitude -- altitude. it's not what you feel when you chew the coca. it's what you don't...